SecurityTrails Blog

Fun with Partial Domain Search
DNSTrails and SecurityTrails allow you to explore the details of your domain names and IPs, or the ones used by your competition as we've seen in previous posts.

Report inaccurate data from DNS, Whois and Tech results
Week by week our engineering team is working hard to perfect and polish every part of our DNS and WHOIS historical services.

Lost your DNS records? DNSTrails can help you
In the past blog posts we have mentioned how useful SecurityTrails and DNSTrails can be to get the right assets to prevent security issues and get valuable security information regarding historical DNS data of your domain and IP addresses.

New feature: IP history by value
Our goal here at SecurityTrails is to make the task of finding and ordering historical domain and IP information easier for you, so we work on building tools to run your investigations and research faster and more effective than ever.

Dear Apiary, let us pay you.
Please invoice us for part no. B88650. TL;DR — we are unable to sign up for Apiary Pro. We have exhausted all the normal support channels, this blog post is our final attempt.

New Feature: Find every domain someone owns automatically
Update: this feature has been moved to SurfaceBrowser™, our all in one OSINT tool. Get full access to historical WHOIS records, open ports, SSL certificates, and other recon data in an instant. Book a demo today! Today, we are excited to announce our latest feature which we have been working on for the past weeks. It is the Whois aggregation tool that is now available on DNSTrails.

Product and Marketing Meetup in Las Vegas
At SecurityTrails, we run a diverse remote team. I’ve always built companies with remote offices, but this is my first time having individual people being remote as a strategy.

Explore any IP neighborhood
In the past weeks our team has been working on a new feature that allows you to easily explore your IP neighbors.

Tracking the most censored racist website on the Internet
The Daily Stormer has just become one of the most censored websites by all major domain and web hosting providers. They've been jumping between new TLD domain names, web hosting and dns server providers since they got kicked off from their original network.